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Project Name Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project Document Name Project Brief Example Document Identifier Project Brief Authorities Version: 01_00 Draft/Final Date: 01 July 2010 Author: Geoff Rankins Owner: Sue Bright Client: SuperCare Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project 1 Project Definition 1.1 Background Project Brief EX The provider of the CareBase system, used as a standalone client management system at each of the 200 short-term care sites, has indicated that they wish to discontinue support of the system on 01 December 20XX. The provider has indicated that this time they will not consider our requests to extend support of the system beyond this date. CareBase is not a robust system; the interface of data to Central Office is errorprone; the data held in CareBase is not of high quality, impacting on quality of service delivery, regulatory reporting and funding submissions. SuperCare requires a replacement client management system. 1.2 Project objectives Sustain and improve the management of short-term care services beyond 2009. 1.3 Desired outcomes This project is to acquire a replacement for the CareBase system, like-for-like in terms of functionality and which does not require material work practice changes at short-term care sites, thoroughly test the replacement system, and implement the new system into all short-term care sites before 01 December 20XX. 1.4 Project scope and exclusions In Scope The Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project is to customise the AmeriCare product to produce the Unify application, integrate Unify into SuperCare’s finance, HR and funding systems, test and accept Unify, train all short-term care staff who will need to use Unify, cleanse and migrate data relating to recent clients in CareBase to Unify, implement Unify into all Short-Term Care sites, and provide initial support of Unify at implemented sites. Exclusions The following are specifically excluded from project scope: 1.5 Business process improvement at Short-Term sites. Gathering of long-term care services requirements. Annual Statutory Reporting requirements Enhancement of client referral systems Constraints and assumptions Current CareBase support arrangements will expire in December 2009. 1.6 Project tolerances This project should cost $9.5M, but must not cost more than $10M. This project should complete by 01 October 2009, but must complete by 01 December 2009. 1.7 Stakeholders CEO and the Executive Leadership Team Document1 Page 2 of 8 Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project Project Brief EX The Unify Programme Board Staff providing services to short-term care clients, including client-facing staff, site managers, regional managers, Care Services Managers, and the Operations Director. Finance staff dealing with funding requests. ISU staff who support CareBase and the Help Desk, and who will support Unify. Global Care Solutions as the provider of the AmeriCare system 1.8 Interfaces ISU has commissioned an IS Architectural Review which may alter Unify’s underpinning infrastructure requirements. ISU has commissioned a project to review and upgrade technical infrastructure at all sites. The Business Process Improvement team is to undertake a project to reengineer work practices across SuperCare, over the life of this project. 2 Outline Business Case The following options have been considered: Option 1 Do Nothing. While cost neutral until 01 December 20XX, beyond that deadline the provider of CareBase is legally entitled to enter our sites and physically delete the system from every PC on the site. Doing nothing is not an option in this case. Expected benefits: nil Expected dis-benefits: inability to operate much beyond 01 December 20XX; loss of funding from funding agencies; inability to satisfy regulatory requirements Timescale: not applicable Costs: nil Risk: damage to organisational reputation; reduction in quality of service delivery Summary: not feasible Option 2 Purchase CareBase. SuperCare could purchase the intellectual property (IP) represented by CareBase. Our approaches to the provider of SuperCare have been rebuffed, because much of this IP has been carried forward into their replacement product CareSys. The provider has indicated clearly to SuperCare that they will not sell or licence the IP in CareBase to SuperCare after their deadline date. Expected benefits: ability to operate beyond 01 December 20XX with no impact on business-as-usual Expected dis-benefits: SuperCare continues to use an unreliable system, which cannot support expected expansions in the level and range of services offered by SuperCare Timescale: not applicable Costs: not applicable Risks: not applicable Summary: not possible Option 3 Licence CareSys. The provider of CareBase has developed a replacement system based on current technologies called CareSys. CareSys would Document1 Page 3 of 8 Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project Project Brief EX be familiar to SuperCare staff, but is functionally much richer that CareBase requires greater expertise and overheads for operation and on-site support than CareBase. The provider of CareSys has provided quotes for licence fees that indicate that SuperCare’s cost of annual ownership would increase by 250% (from $5Million per year to $12.5Million per year). In addition, SuperCare would have to run a project to convert each site from CareBase to CareSys. Indicative estimates for such a project are that it would take 12 months and cost $15Million. Expected benefits: SuperCare would have a modern, robust care services system Expected dis-benefits: the cost of ownership would increase by 250%; many staff would become alienated by major work practice changes in a short time Timescale: 12 months Costs: project cost $15Million, operational cost per year $12.5Million Risks: CareSys may not evolve in parallel with SuperCare’s business direction – this is highly likely given the provider’s attitude to SuperCare. Some staff may leave SuperCare Summary: The ongoing licence fees would be prohibitive and unaffordable Option 4 Develop a replacement system in-house. SuperCare could develop a replacement software system in-house. SuperCare’s subject matter experts could develop detailed requirements for such a system to reflect SuperCare’s current and expected business environment. The software development is estimated to require 12 months and cost $15Million, with extreme risk to SuperCare given our recent software development failures. The implementation of this system is estimated to require 12 months and cost $15Million. Organisational change associated with this project is estimated to require 12 months and cost $5Million, but this could be undertaken in parallel with the software development activities. Ongoing operational, support and maintenance costs are estimated at $5Million per year. Expected benefits: SuperCare would have a modern, robust care services system exactly matching current needs and providing a sound basis for future enhancement Expected dis-benefits: the cost of ownership would increase by 250%; many staff would become alienated by major work practice changes in a short time Timescale: 24 months Costs: project cost: $35Million, operational cost per year $5Million Risks: SuperCare has no expertise in governing, managing or undertaking a major software development project. Some staff may leave SuperCare Summary: This is the Option with the longest timeframe, greatest cost and greatest risk Option 5 Develop a like-for-like replacement of CareBase. This Option is as per Option 4, but with no functional enhancement and no organisational change. The software development is estimated to require 8 months and cost $10Million, with extreme risk to SuperCare given our recent software development failures. The implementation of this system is estimated to require 12 months and cost $12Million. Ongoing operational, support and maintenance costs are estimated at $4Million per year. A subsequent project to cover system enhancement and organisational change in SuperCare would be required. Expected benefits: Staff would be familiar with the functionality of the new system Expected dis-benefits: A subsequent enhancement project would be required, but this could be done at SuperCare’s convenience Timescale: 20 months Costs: project cost: $22Million, operational cost per year $4Million Document1 Page 4 of 8 Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project Project Brief EX Risks: SuperCare has no expertise in governing, managing or undertaking a major software development project. Some staff may leave SuperCare Summary: While of shorter cost and duration than Option 4, SuperCare is still exposed to significant risks Option 6 Acquire a software package. SuperCare could acquire a package with a close fit to SuperCare’s requirements, and customise the package. SuperCare’s subject matter experts could develop detailed requirements for customisation and enhancement of such a package to reflect SuperCare’s current and expected business environment. Package customisation and enhancement is estimated to require 12 months and cost $10Million. The implementation of this system is estimated to require 12 months and cost $15Million. Organisational change associated with this project is estimated to require 12 months and cost $5Million, but this could be undertaken in parallel with the customisation and enhancement activities. Ongoing licence fees, and operational and support costs are estimated at $5Million per year. Expected benefits: SuperCare would acquire a modern care services management system, with additional functionality Expected dis-benefits: Staff would not be familiar with the ‘look and feel’ of the package, and would require training and support Timescale: 24 months Costs: project cost: $30Million, operational cost per year $5Million Risks: SuperCare has no expertise in governing, managing or undertaking a major package customisation and organisational change project. Some staff may leave SuperCare. Possible divergence over time between core package functionality and SuperCare’s evolving requirements Summary: This appears to be a lower risk approach than Option 4 Option 7 Acquire a like-for-like replacement of CareBase. This Option is as per Option 6, but with no functional enhancement and no organisational change. The package customisation is estimated to require 6 months and cost $5Million, with low risk to SuperCare if a reliable vendor were involved. The implementation of this system is estimated to require 12 months and cost $10Million. Ongoing licence fees, and operational support and maintenance costs are estimated at $4Million per year. A subsequent project to cover package enhancement and organisational change in SuperCare would be required. Expected benefits: SuperCare would acquire a modern care services management system, but without additional functionality Expected dis-benefits: Staff would not be familiar with the ‘look and feel’ of the package, and would require training and support Timescale: 18 months Costs: project cost: $15Million, operational cost per year $4Million Risks: SuperCare has no expertise in governing, managing or undertaking a major package customisation project. Some staff may leave SuperCare Summary: This appears to be a lower risk approach than Option 4 Option 8 Move to a paper-based client management system. This could be done within 3 months at a cost of around $5Million, with ongoing costs of around $4Million per year. While attractive to many staff, a paper-based system would not be acceptable to the care services regulators and funding agencies, and is probably infeasible because SuperCare has become such a highly complex organisation over the last 10 years. Expected benefits: All staff could work with the system Document1 Page 5 of 8 Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project Project Brief EX Expected dis-benefits: Central Office visibility of regional activities essentially disappears. Timescale: 3 months Costs: project cost: $5Million, operational cost per year $4Million Risks: Damage to organisational reputation; Summary: not feasible 2.1 Option Selected It is recommended that SuperCare adopt Option 7, as this represents the optimal balance between cost, duration and risk. 3 Project Product Description Composition The customised Unify application Effective interfaces between Unify and SuperCare’s financial and HR systems Training materials (for train-the-trainer and staff training) Trained staff Cleansed and Migrated data Implemented short-term care sites Operations, support and maintenance materials CareBase decommissioned at implemented sites See attached Project Product Description for full details. 4 Project Approach SuperCare will licence AmeriCare as the basis for Unify, and engage GCS to customise it to completely meet its business needs. DigiWare will be retained to develop data cleansing and migration procedures. SuperCare will develop training and reporting products, then implement Unify on a site by site basis. 5 Project Management Team Structure 5.1 Organisation Chart Role Nominee(s) Executive Sue Bright Senior User Errol Flynn Senior Supplier Jeff Cartwright Project Assurance Wendy Worrall external experts in programme and project design and delivery, or in the Gateway Review technique Quality Assurance will provide an external auditor on behalf Document1 Page 6 of 8 Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project Role Project Brief EX Nominee(s) of the Programme Board Change Authority The Project Board as a whole Project Manager You! Team Manager(s) Jodie Foster, Information Management Team Manager Helen Hunt, Training Team Manager Michael Douglas, Technical Team Manager (DigiWare) Cindy Reid, GCS Team Manager but someone on-site would be a better alternative Project Support Suzie Quattro, Administrator Noah Taylor, ISU Project Office Charlotte Rampling, Corporate Communications 5.2 Role Descriptions See attached Role Descriptions for full details. 6 References Unify Programme Definition V02_01 Unify Programme Business Case V05_01 Unify Programme Plan V01_05 Unify Feasibility Study Report V02_02 DigiWare Contract 2008_12_07 Global Care Solutions Contract 2008_12_15 Document1 Page 7 of 8 Short-Term CareBase Replacement Project Project Brief EX Document History Document Location This document is only valid on the day it was printed. The source of the document will be found in the XXXXX directory. Templates This document is based on the Project Brief TP V01_00 Template and the Project Brief PD V01_00 Product Description. Revision History Version Number Revision date Summary of Changes 01_00 01Jul2010 Original Approvals Name This document requires the following approvals. Signed approval forms are filed in the XXXXX directory. Signature Title Date of Issue 01Jul2010 Distribution Name 01_00 This document has been distributed to: Title Date of Issue 01Jul2010 Document1 Version Version 01_00 Page 8 of 8